Current:Home > Contact-usMore than 90% of people killed by western Afghanistan quake were women and children, UN says-LoTradeCoin
More than 90% of people killed by western Afghanistan quake were women and children, UN says
View Date:2025-01-11 23:43:33
ISLAMABAD (AP) — More than 90% of the people killed by a 6.3-magnitude earthquake in western Afghanistan last weekend were women and children, U.N. officials reported Thursday.
Taliban officials said Saturday’s earthquake killed more than 2,000 people of all ages and genders across Herat province. The epicenter was in Zenda Jan district, where 1,294 people died, 1,688 were injured and every home was destroyed, according to U.N. figures.
Women and children were more likely to have been at home when the quake struck in the morning, said Siddig Ibrahim, the chief of the UNICEF field office in Herat, said. “When the first earthquake hit, people thought it was an explosion, and they ran into their homes,” he said.
Hundreds of people, mostly women, remain missing in Zenda Jan.
The Afghanistan representative for the United Nations Population Fund, Jaime Nadal, said there would have been no “gender dimension” to the death toll if the quake had happened at night.
“At that time of the day, men were out in the field,” Nadal told The Associated Press. “Many men migrate to Iran for work. The women were at home doing the chores and looking after the children. They found themselves trapped under the rubble. There was clearly a gender dimension.”
The initial quake, numerous aftershocks and a second 6.3-magnitude quake on Wednesday flattened entire villages, destroying hundreds of mud-brick homes that could not withstand such force. Schools, health clinics and other village facilities also collapsed.
The Norwegian Refugee Council described the devastation as enormous.
“Early reports from our teams are that many of those who lost their lives were small children who were crushed or suffocated after buildings collapsed on them,” the council said.
The maternity hospital in Herat province has cracks that make the structure unsafe. The U.N. Population Fund has provided tents so pregnant women have somewhere to stay and receive care, Nadal said.
Many people inside and outside the provincial capital are still sleeping outside, even as temperatures drop.
The disproportionate impact of the quake on women has left children without mothers, their primary caregivers, raising questions about who will raise them or how to reunite them with fathers who might be out of the province or Afghanistan.
Aid officials say orphanages are non-existent or uncommon, meaning children who have lost one or both parents were likely to be taken in by surviving relatives or community members.
Earthquakes are common in Afghanistan, where there are a number of fault lines and frequent movement among three nearby tectonic plates.
Women may be at greater risk of being unprepared for quakes because of Taliban edicts curtailing their mobility and rights, and restrictions imposed on female humanitarian workers, a U.N. report has warned.
Authorities have barred girls from school beyond sixth grade and stopped women from working at nongovernmental groups, although there are exceptions for some sectors like health care. The Taliban also say that women cannot travel long distances without male chaperones.
Aid agencies say their female Afghan staff members are “for now” working freely in Herat and reaching women and girls affected by the earthquake.
UNICEF has launched a $20 million appeal to help the estimate 13,000 children and families devastated by the earthquake.
veryGood! (85)
Related
- Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin to kick off fundraising effort for Ohio women’s suffrage monument
- A new IRS program is helping its first users file their income taxes electronically. And it’s free
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Bitcoin to Reach $90,000 by End of 2024
- Texas sheriff who was under scrutiny following mass shooting loses reelection bid
- When is 'The Golden Bachelorette' finale? Date, time, where to watch Joan Vassos' big decision
- Pregnant Lala Kent Says She’s Raising Baby No. 2 With This Person
- A’s release renderings of new Las Vegas domed stadium that resembles famous opera house
- Sister Wives’ Janelle Brown Gets Pre-Cancerous Spots Removed Amid Health Scare
- NASCAR Championship race live updates, how to watch: Cup title on the line at Phoenix
- Guns, ammo and broken knife parts were found in the home where an Amish woman was slain, police said
Ranking
- Younghoo Koo takes blame for Falcons loss to Saints: 'This game is fully on me'
- France enshrines women's constitutional right to an abortion in a global first
- OpenAI says Elon Musk agreed ChatGPT maker should become for profit
- Taylor Swift baked homemade Pop-Tarts for Chiefs players. Now the brand wants her recipe.
- Democrat Cleo Fields wins re-drawn Louisiana congressional district, flipping red seat blue
- Kelly Osbourne Details Sid Wilson Romance Journey After Fight Over Son's Name Change
- Illegally imported goose intestines hidden under rattlesnakes, federal authorities say
- Gas chemicals investigated as cause of fire and explosions at suburban Detroit building
Recommendation
-
Dallas Long, who won 2 Olympic medals while dominating the shot put in the 1960s, has died at 84
-
Taylor Swift posts message about voting on Super Tuesday
-
Meta attorneys ask judge to dismiss shareholder suit alleging failure to address human trafficking
-
Commercial air tours over New Mexico’s Bandelier National Monument will soon be prohibited
-
Michelle Obama Is Diving Back into the Dating World—But It’s Not What You Think
-
Starbucks Middle East franchisee cuts 2,000 workers amid Gaza war boycotts
-
EAGLEEYE COIN: Strong SEC Regulation Makes Cryptocurrency Market Stronger
-
Cheesemaker pleads guilty in connection to a listeria outbreak that killed 2, sickened 8